Discourse and Pragmatic Markers from Latin to the Romance Languages

Edited by Chiara Ghezzi and Piera Molinelli

Description

This book examines the historical development of discourse and pragmatic markers across the Romance languages. These markers serve to indicate the organization of the discourse, the speaker's relationship with the interlocutor, and the speaker's stance with regard to the information expressed. Their relevance is in assisting interpretation, despite the fact that they have little or no propositional content.

In this book, distinguished scholars from different theoretical backgrounds analyse the different classes of discourse and pragmatic markers found in Latin and the Romance languages and explore both their diachronic development and their synchronic properties. Following an introduction and overview of the development of these markers, the book is divided into two parts: the first part investigates pragmatic markers developed from verbs, such as Latin quaeso, Romanian ma rog, and Spanish o sea; the second looks at adverbs as discourse markers, such as French deja and Italian gia, Romanian atunci and Portuguese alias. Chapters address a variety of theoretical issues such as the cyclic nature of functional developments, the nature of grammaticalization and pragmaticalization, semantic change, and the emergence of new pragmatic values. The arguments presented also have consequences for any analysis of the interfaces between grammar, discourse, and interaction.

Discourse and Pragmatic Markers from Latin to the Romance Languages

Edited by Chiara Ghezzi and Piera Molinelli

Author Information

Chiara Ghezzi is a researcher at the University of Bergamo, where she was previously Adjunct Lecturer in Sociolinguistics and Didactics of the Italian Language. She received her PhD from the University of Pavia with a dissertation entitled 'Vagueness Markers in Contemporary Italian: Intergenerational Variation and Pragmatic Change'. Her research interests include historical pragmatics, the history of old Italian, grammaticalization theory, sociolinguistic variation in contemporary Italian, and discourse and pragmatic markers. Her publications include three articles in Linguistica e Filologia.

Piera Molinelli is Professor of General Linguistics at the University of Bergamo. She coordinates several Italian national research groups and has organized national and international conferences. Her areas of research include diachronic and historical linguistics, the history of Latin and old Italian, discourse and pragmatic markers, grammaticalization, language contact, and multilingualism. She is the author of Fenomeni della negazione dal latino all'italiano (La Nuova Italia 1988), along with a number of journal articles, and is co-editor of Ars linguistica (Bulzoni 1998), Comunicare nella torre di Babele. Repertori plurilingui in Italia oggi (Carocci 2001), Synchrony and Diachrony: A dynamic interface (Benjamins 2013), and Plurilinguismo e diglossia nella Tarda Antichita e nel Medioevo (SISMEL Il Galluzzo 2013).

Contributors:

Adriana Costachescu, University of Craiova, RomaniaChiara Fedriani, University of Bergamo, ItalyChiara Ghezzi, University of Bergamo and University of Bologna, ItalyMaria Iliescu, University of Innsbruck, Austria, and University of Craiova, RomaniaMichaela Livescu, University of Craiova, RomaniaAna Cristina Macario Lopes, Coimbra University, PortugalEmanuele Miola, Istituto Universitario di Studi Superiori di Pavia, ItalyPiera Molinelli, University of Bergamo, ItalyMaj-Britt Mosegaard Hansen, University of Manchester, UKSalvador Pons Bordería, University of Valencia, SpainMihaela Popescu, University of Craiova, RomaniaMario Squartini, University of Turin, ItalyCorinne Rossari, University of Fribourg, Switzerland

Discourse and Pragmatic Markers from Latin to the Romance Languages

Edited by Chiara Ghezzi and Piera Molinelli

Reviews and Awards

"This volume offers a wide spectrum of approaches to identifying different classes of functional markers in relation to their lexical sources and to discussing the development of discourse and pragmatic markers, underlining, in a contrastive perspective, the regularities of processes in different languages, to account for the role of both the synchronic and the diachronic dimension, and also for their integration." --LINGUIST LIST